Skip to Main Content (Press Enter)
A Backpack, a Bear, and Eight Crates of Vodka by Lev Golinkin
Add A Backpack, a Bear, and Eight Crates of Vodka to bookshelf
Add to Bookshelf

A Backpack, a Bear, and Eight Crates of Vodka

Best Seller
A Backpack, a Bear, and Eight Crates of Vodka by Lev Golinkin
Paperback $18.00
Oct 13, 2015 | ISBN 9780345806338

Buy from Other Retailers:

See All Formats (1) +
  • $18.00

    Oct 13, 2015 | ISBN 9780345806338

    Buy from Other Retailers:

  • Nov 04, 2014 | ISBN 9780385537780

    Buy from Other Retailers:

Product Details

Praise

“[A] hilarious and heartbreaking story of a Jewish family’s escape from oppression….whose drama, hope and heartache Mr. Golinkin captures brilliantly…A wonderful writer, witty and economical, he generally applies a light touch to emotionally heavy material. Adversity offers him rich comic material.”
The New York Times

“An awesome intercontinental whirlwind, funny and smart. Go Ukraine!”
Gary Shteyngart, bestselling author of Little Failure 

“Golinkin’s memoir is a look into life during the Cold War, as well as a coming-of-age-story about finding yourself and where you belong. And reading the harrowing details of his family’s exodus will have you counting your own blessings—and hugging the people you love.”
–Glamour.com 

“Mr. Golinkin excels at these moments, describing the emotional truth of immigration… His account is so raw that it manages to capture at a visceral level the feelings of many of the million Soviet Jews who left their homeland at the Cold War’s end.”
The Wall Street Journal

“[Lev Golinkin] convincingly relates the purgatory of statelessness, the confused anticipatory state of the immigrant.”
–The Chicago Tribune

“Best memoir title of the year…Golinkin’s A Backpack, a Bear, and Eight Crates of Vodka is fueled not by sly humor but by a potent cocktail of earnestness and anger.”
–The Oregonian

“Outstanding, original, and deeply moving.”
Chuck Hogan, bestselling author of The Town and co-author of The Strain

“As the author turned nine during the Soviet Union’s final years, his Jewish family fled hostile Kharkov, in Ukraine, with virtually no possessions and made their way through central Europe to the U.S. After college, he retracted their steps, thanking the NGO workers and patrons who’d helped them – including the son of an unrepentant Nazi Austrian baron. Golinkin’s account of the whole saga is lucidly intelligent and humanistic – and deeply moving.”
ELLE (The Elle’s Lettres 2015 Readers’ Prize)

“A vibrant, stylish work of literary nonfiction that’s equally joyous and tragic.”
–The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philly.com)

“Thirty years after the end of the Cold War, there is a vibrant literary canon written by former Soviet Jews who have come of age in America. Gary Shteyngart may be the group’s founding father; Anya Ulinich, its graphic novelist; Yelena Akhtiorskaya, its newest ingenue. Mr. Golinkin, with this deeply personal and sometimes painful dissection of the split identity of an emigre, has grabbed the role of psychotherapist.”
–Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
 
“Despite the serious topic, Golinkin writes with a light touch; he has a natural sense of humor and an easy style…[A Backpack, a Bear, andEight Crates of Vodka opens with a depiction of breathtaking cruelty. But by the end, readers may feel breathless at the incredible kindness of strangers.”
–Minneapolis Star Tribune

“There’s a gem on every page of A Backpack, A Bear, and Eight Crates of Vodka. Lev Golinkin has the skill and vision necessary to tell the story of a crumbling empire, and the soulfulness and flair to capture that story in the saga of one man. He’s an alert, and witty, and humane storyteller. I will eagerly read anything he writes.”
Avi Steinberg, author of Running the Books and The Lost Book of Mormon

“Golinkin came to America as a Ukrainian child refugee with only what he and his family could carry. But he’s found his family fortune in their exodus story–a soulful tale that is both incredibly beautiful and wickedly funny, a tale of being lost, being found and finding home.”
Helene Stapinski, author of Five-Finger Discount: A Crooked Family History 
 
“An unforgettable coming-of-age memoir of a boy from Soviet Ukraine that entertains as it conveys insight into the meaning of America in today’s turbulent world.”
Jack F. Matlock, Jr., former ambassador to the Soviet Union under Reagan and George H.W. Bush, and author of Reagan and Gorbachev and Autopsy on an Empire

“In Lev Golinkin’s skillful memoir, A Backpack, a Bear, and Eight Crates of Vodka, we share his family’s traumatic flight to freedom from Soviet Ukraine, and then a young man’s brave attempt to build a meaningful life in the United States.”
Peter Eisner, author of The Pope’s Last Crusade

“[Lev] Golinkin’s personal tale of childhood in the Ukraine has the specificity of his own story at its heart, and becomes more than just a woeful yarn about repression in the Soviet Bloc. It can be heartbreaking, but in unexpected and nuanced ways…When he catches up with the present, the narrative fractures, skipping between his return voyage to the Ukraine to answer his own questions about leaving and accounts of his family’s early experiences in their new country. All these strains are working at once in the story, as they are in his mind, as he digs up repressed memories and reassembles fragmented ones. Golinkin’s memoir travels along at a confident clip, giving readers not just an immigrant story, but also a detailed look at how the mind wraps itself around a complicated life.”
–Biographile.com

“Golinkin writes with dry humor about his experience but connects emotionally…A Backpack, a Bear, and Eight Crates of Vodka blends memoir and history into an intimate tale of personal growth.”
BookPage

“Golinkin convincingly portrays the miseries, and rare joys, of his bullied, furtive childhood, and the limits it put on him….[He] has created a deeply moving account of fear and hope.”
Publishers Weekly

“An ex-Iron Curtain refugee-turned-American citizen tells the emotional story of how he and his parents fled the Ukraine two years before the collapse of the Soviet Union…Unflinching honesty. A mordantly affecting chronicle of a journey to discover that ‘you can’t have a future if you don’t have a past.'”
Kirkus Reviews

“Golinkin’s early memories are touchingly true to those of a youngster, and he reports on his family members’ fears, troubles, persistence, and patience with a keen eye and a memorable voice…Eye-opening for those who come to the U.S. and for those who help them do so.”
Booklist

Looking for More Great Reads?
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
Back to Top